Contract Positions in Georgia (5)
View All Jobs →Remote Psychiatric Nurse Practitioner - Fee For Service
Georgia
Copy of Nurse Practitioner or Physician Assistant (Senior Health)
Atlanta, Georgia
Independent Telehealth Psychiatric Mental Health Nurse Practitioner
Augusta, Georgia
Independent Telehealth Psychiatric Mental Health Nurse Practitioner
Beallwood, Georgia
Remote PMHNP: Flexible Telehealth Clinician with Guaranteed Pay
Atlanta, GA
Top Employers
- Seasoned Recruitment3
- One Medical1
- Thriveworks1
Contract Tips
- •Negotiate contract length, extension clauses, and cancellation terms
- •Work with reputable staffing agencies for protection
- •Maintain your own benefits (health insurance, retirement)
- •Keep detailed records of all business expenses for tax deductions
- •Build relationships for contract-to-perm conversion opportunities
Why Contract?
Contract PMHNPs earn 20-50% more per hour than permanent staff, with rates of $70-130+/hr.
Contract roles let you evaluate an employer, location, and patient population before converting to permanent.
As a contract worker, deduct home office, travel, equipment, and continuing education from your taxes.
Why Choose Contract
Contract Careers in Georgia
Contract & temp-to-perm psychiatric NP positions
Premium Rates
Contract PMHNPs earn 20-50% more per hour than permanent staff, with rates of $70-130+/hr.
Try Before You Commit
Contract roles let you evaluate an employer, location, and patient population before converting to permanent.
Tax Advantages
As a contract worker, deduct home office, travel, equipment, and continuing education from your taxes.
State Insights
Georgia at a Glance
Contract PMHNP positions in Georgia are typically defined-term W-2 engagements (90 days to 24 months) booked through staffing agencies, paying $90–$150 per hour with agency-provided malpractice. Distinct from 1099 independent contracting, contract roles preserve employer payroll-tax handling and often include short-term health coverage. Georgia grants restricted practice authority requiring physician supervision, and the state's cost of living near the national average (index 103) directly shapes PMHNP compensation expectations. Top metros in Georgia are not currently federally designated mental health shortage areas, but regional psychiatric demand and reimbursement structure shape compensation. The 5 active postings reflect a smaller pool of openings for PMHNPs in the state.
Georgia requires PMHNPs to practice under physician supervision with a protocol agreement.




